Huston Street is back in the Rockies’ clubhouse and soon will be back with the Rockies. Very soon.

As in Tuesday.

Street added some intrigue to his final rehab outing Saturday night at Triple-A Colorado Springs when he was ejected by home plate umpire Matt Schaufert after allowing three hits and three runs in his scheduled 1 1/3 innings.

“I felt great,” Street said. “I made my pitches. That’s what was so frustrating. You feel like you’re making pitches and you’re in unfavorable counts. It’s obviously not the way you want to finish, but I felt like I executed.

“I still threw 15 out of 24 pitches for strikes, even with the strike zone. I felt like I got squeezed and I mentioned that to him. I made a point not to use profanity. It’s a part of the game. You’re men and you argue. It’s like kids out in the backyard.”

Street was in the Rockies’ clubhouse Sunday in anticipation of being activated for Tuesday’s series opener against the Boston Red Sox. He says he’s completely healthy and topped out at 92 mph Saturday night.

Rockies manager Jim Tracy will “massage” Street in the early going until he’s ready to return to the closer role. That probably means appearances in the seventh and eighth innings in one-sided games.

Said Tracy, when asked about Street’s ejection: “We’ve run the gamut with Huston. Bullpen sessions, simulated games, rehab assignments. . . . I don’t care how many times you do it, you can’t get him as amped up as (he would be for a major-league game). So to a certain extent, maybe that ends up being a good thing, because that competitive edge is there.”

Sunblock.

Jason Giambi said he was happy to be starting Sunday afternoon. As in, not having to start a 6:10 p.m. game. Why? The sun over the left-field grandstand, which prompted Todd Helton to whiff on a throw from Ian Stewart during Saturday’s game.

“I’ve been lucky over there many years,” Helton said. “I could very well have missed the next throw too.”

By the numbers.

Helton, out of the lineup Sunday, had struck out eight times in his previous four games. He has struck out 44 times in 214 at-bats, once every 4.9 at-bats. His career mark before the season was once in 7.4 at-bats.

Footnotes.

Saturday’s 8-7 win marked the first time this season the Rockies won after trailing by three runs. . . . The Rockies have signed 10 of their first 20 draft choices, but their No. 1 pick, Clemson outfielder Kyle Parker, is unsigned.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Tyreek Hill didn’t know what to do when he started hearing thousands of people in Arrowhead Stadium chanting his name, even as he stood all alone on the frozen turf waiting for the punt.